
Birthdate: Aug 22, 1991
Birthplace: London, England, United Kingdom
Naomi Ackie (birthname: Naomi Sarah Ackie) is a fast-rising, emerging British film star, having landed her first starring role as Whitney Houston in Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody (2022) after only five previous features. Ackie burst onto the feature film scene with great impact in writer-director William Ackroyd’s acclaimed Lady Macbeth (2016), starring Florence Pugh and earning Ackie kudos with a Most Promising Newcomer award from the British Independent Film Awards and double nominations (Best Newcomer and Best Supporting Actress) from the National Film Awards in the UK.
Ackie joined Idris Elba in a supporting role in his directorial debut, the British crime drama Yardie (2018), alongside Aml Ameen and Stephen Graham, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Ackie earned a supporting role in another British crime drama, The Corrupted (2019), alongside Sam Claflin, Timothy Spall, Noel Clarke, and Hugh Bonneville. Naomi Ackie’s first studio production was as Jannah in J.J. Abrams’ Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019), starring Daisy Ridley, Adam Driver, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Domhnall Gleeson, and Richard E. Grant, and grossing just $1 billion globally.
Ackie’s first co-starring role was in writer-director Malachi Smyth’s British heist movie-with-music, The Score (2021), co-starring Johnny Flynn and Will Poulter. Director Kasi Lemmons cast Ackie as Whitney Houston in the jukebox biopic I Wanna Dance with Somebody, with a supporting cast including Stanley Tucci, Ashton Sanders, Tamara Tunie, and Clarke Peters.
Ackie’s third big American-produced movie (in a co-starring role) is Oscar-winning Korean writer-director Bong Joon-ho’s highly anticipated sci-fi drama, Mickey 17 (2024), produced by Warner Bros. starring Robert Pattinson, Steven Yeun, Toni Collette, and Mark Ruffalo, followed by Ackie’s next starring role in the MGM-backed thriller, Blink Twice (2024), with Zoë Kravitz in her debut as director/co-writer/co-producer guiding a cast including Channing Tatum, Simon Rex, Christian Slater, Geena Davis, Adria Arjona, Haley Joel Osment, Kyle MacLachlan, Alia Shawcat, and Saul Williams.
Ackie then co-starred with Samantha Morton and Hector Hewer in the time-travel, nonfiction, sci-fi film 2073 (2024), director-producer Asif Kapadia’s feature-length expansion of Chris Marker’s short masterwork La Jetée (1962), which premiered out of competition at the 2024 Venice Film Festival. Ackie co-starred with Robert Pattinson, Steven Yeun, Toni Collette, and Mark Ruffalo in Korean master filmmaker Bong Joon-ho’s $150-million sci-fi movie, Mickey 17 (2025), adapted from Edward Ashton’s 2022 novel, Mickey7, and released by Warner Bros.
Naomi Ackie co-starred with director/writer/star Eva Victor in the black comedy-drama, Sorry, Baby (2025), with Louis Cancelmi, Kelly McCormack, Lucas Hedges and John Carroll Lynch, produced in part by Barry Jenkins, and which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival before a $3.3 million gross for distributor A24. Ackie joined the cast of the U.K.-U.S. co-production, Shelter (2026), starring and produced by Jason Statham, with Bodhi Rae Breathnach, Daniel Mays, and Bill Nighy under Ric Roman Waugh’s direction, and earning $54 million globally for distributor Black Bear Pictures.
Ackie was a member of the sprawling cast of director/writer Boots Riley’s surrealist crime comedy, I Love Roosters (2026), co-starring the ensemble of Keke Palmer, Taylour Paige, Poppy Liu, Eiza Gonzalez, LaKeith Stanfield, Will Poulter, Don Cheadle and Demi Moore, produced by Ryder Picture Company/Annapurna Pictures/Savage Rose Films and which premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival before a wide release by Neon (U.S.-Canada)/Focus Features and Universal Pictures (International). Ackie played a doctor in the DC Universe body horror movie, Clayface (2026), with Tom Rhys Harries, David Dencik, Max Minghella, and Eddie Marsan under James Watkins’s direction, co-written by Mike Flanagan and Hossein Amini, produced in part by Matt Reeves and James Gunn, and released by Warner Bros. Pictures.
Naomie Ackie was born in the Camden borough of London and raised in Walthamstow in the eastern end of Greater London by a father who worked for Transport for London and a mother who worked for the National Health Service who were both second-generation immigrants from Grenada. Ackie has two older siblings, a brother, and a sister.
Her elementary education was at Walthamstow School for Girls, where she first performed on stage in school plays. Her growing interest in acting led her to study at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, attached to the University of London. Ackie’s height is 5’ 6”.
Upcoming (2)
Previous (7)
Theatre Streak: Before her great success on screen, Naomie Ackie had a fine run on the English stage, with roles at the National Theatre, and such London-based theaters as the Greenwich Theatre, Theatre Centre, Soho Theatre, Unicorn Theatre, and Theatre Delicatessan.
People Also Searched For